By Bertil Lintner

The Irrawaddy-May 17, 2024

Throughout decades of military rule in Myanmar stretching back to the early 1960s, Japan has sought to maintain a “special relationship” with the country, continuing to provide aid and investment and distancing itself from the West’s policy of trying to isolate the ruling generals. It has also played a role in peace talks between successive juntas and the country’s ethnic armed organizations (EAOs), though largely through non-governmental organizations such as the Nippon Foundation, with Tokyo maintaining strong official ties with the Myanmar military. This month, however, leaders of some EAOs and officials from the civilian National Unity Government, which are currently fighting the military regime, flew to Tokyo for talks with government officials there, possibly signaling a change in Japan’s position towards the current junta, whose grip on power is looking increasingly fragile. Read more at: https://www.irrawaddy.com/from-the-archive/japans-special-relationship-with-myanmar-has-abetted-decades-of-military-rule.html First published in The Irrawaddy